On May 5, 2014 3:36:38 PM PDT, Serge Hallyn <serge.hallyn@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >Quoting James Bottomley (James.Bottomley@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx): >> On Mon, 2014-05-05 at 22:27 +0000, Serge Hallyn wrote: >> > Quoting James Bottomley (James.Bottomley@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx): >> > > On Mon, 2014-05-05 at 17:48 -0400, Richard Guy Briggs wrote: >> > > > On 14/05/05, Serge E. Hallyn wrote: >> > > > > Quoting James Bottomley >(James.Bottomley@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx): >> > > > > > On Tue, 2014-04-22 at 14:12 -0400, Richard Guy Briggs >wrote: >> > > > > > > Questions: >> > > > > > > Is there a way to link serial numbers of namespaces >involved in migration of a >> > > > > > > container to another kernel? (I had a brief look at >CRIU.) Is there a unique >> > > > > > > identifier for each running instance of a kernel? Or at >least some identifier >> > > > > > > within the container migration realm? >> > > > > > >> > > > > > Are you asking for a way of distinguishing an migrated >container from an >> > > > > > unmigrated one? The answer is pretty much "no" because the >job of >> > > > > > migration is to restore to the same state as much as >possible. >> > > > > > >> > > > > > Reading between the lines, I think your goal is to >correlate audit >> > > > > > information across a container migration, right? Ideally >the management >> > > > > > system should be able to cough up an audit trail for a >container >> > > > > > wherever it's running and however many times it's been >migrated? >> > > > > > >> > > > > > In that case, I think your idea of a numeric serial number >in a dense >> > > > > > range is wrong. Because the range is dense you're >obviously never going >> > > > > > to be able to use the same serial number across a >migration. However, >> > > > > >> > > > > Ah, but I was being silly before, we can actually address >this pretty >> > > > > simply. If we just (for instance) add >> > > > > /proc/self/ns/{ic,mnt,net,pid,user,uts}_seq containing the >serial number >> > > > > for the relevant ns for the task, then criu can dump this >info at >> > > > > checkpoint. Then at restart it can dump an audit message per >task and >> > > > > ns saying old_serial=%x,new_serial=%x. That way the audit >log reader >> > > > > can if it cares keep track. >> > > > >> > > > This is the sort of idea I had in mind... >> > > >> > > OK, but I don't understand then why you need a serial number. >There are >> > > plenty of things we preserve across a migration, like namespace >name for >> > > instance. Could you explain what function it performs because I >think I >> > > might be missing something. >> > >> > We're looking ahead to a time when audit is namespaced, and a >container >> > can keep its own audit logs (without limiting what the host audits >of >> > course). So if a container is auditing suspicious activity by some >> > task in a sub-namesapce, then the whole parent container gets >migrated, >> > after migration we want to continue being able to correlate the >namespaces. >> > >> > We're also looking at audit trails on a host that is up for years. >We >> > would like every namespace to be uniquely logged there. That is >why >> > inode #s on /proc/self/ns/* are not sufficient, unless we add a >generation >> > # (which would end more complicated, not less, than a serial #). >> >> Right, but when the contaner has an audit namespace, that namespace >has >> a name, > >What ns has a name? The netns for instance. > The audit ns can be tied to 50 pid namespaces, and >we >want to log which pidns is responsible for something. > >If you mean the pidns has a name, that's the problem... it does not, >it >only has a inode # which may later be re-use. I still think there's a miscommunication somewhere: I believe you just need a stable id to tie the audit to, so why not just give the audit namespace a name like net? The id would then be durable across migrations. >> which CRIU would migrate, so why not use that name for the >> log .. no need for numbers (unless you make the name a number, of >> course)? >> >> James > >Sorry if I'm being dense... No I think our assumptions are mismatched. I just can't figure out where. James -- Sent from my Android device with K-9 Mail. Please excuse my brevity. _______________________________________________ Containers mailing list Containers@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/containers